Neighbor’s fencing contractor destroys Oregon homeowner's irrigation system and landscaping, they both deny responsibility, so he plans to sue them both: ‘The damage is around $4,500’

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  • Two workers installing a wooden fence in a yard with a level, string line, and fresh soil nearby.
  • Neighbor's fencing contractor destroyed my irrigation system and landscaping. Who is liable here?

    Last Tuesday I came home from work to find my side yard completely torn up. My neighbor hired a local contractor to replace
  • his wooden fence. The workers decided to park their heavy machinery on my side of the property line to acces the panels.
  • They crushed my underground irrigation system and completely ruined a long row of mature rhododendrons. I immediately went out and stopped them. The
  • foreman told me my neighbor gave them explicit verbal permission to use my yard for the machinery.
  • I confronted my neighbor about it. He completely denied saying that and claims he specifically told the foreman to stay on his side of the lot. He refuses to give me his homeowners insurance info.
  • The fencing company sent me an email yesterday saying they are not liable because they were "following the client's directives". They told me to take it up with my neighbor directly.
  • Two workers installing a wooden fence with a drill, string line, level, and disturbed soil in a sunny yard.
  • The damage is around $4,500 according to a landscaper I had come out on thursday. Nobody is
  • taking responsibility and I am stuck with a broken sprinklar system right as the summer heat is starting to hit.
  • Do I have to take both of them to small claims court and let the judge figure it out? Can I just sue the fencing company since their
  • workers actually caused the physical damage? I dont want to waste time suing the wrong party.
  • corourke Your neighbor can't give. permission to your property to a company. Get the insurance info from the company and call them.
  • Yellow stump grinder tearing up soil near a tree stump beside a wooden fence in a yard.
  • Business Trout1 Everybody is talking about small court claims but if you talk with a lawyer and they send a letter to the company I bet they will fork the money.
  • You will spend less time dealing with the court and the fees.
  • KingofQueens24 100% on the fencing company. They should know better than to enter someone else's property without that owners permission. If
  • the neighbor told them it ok to rob a bank, and they went and did it, that doesn't make it legal since someone with no ownership said it
  • was ok. Thats just the fencing company realizing they messed up and trying to pass the blame to the other homeowner.

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